In this report, we evaluated the treatment results of a combination of surgery and radiosurgery for large vestibular schwannomas. The series of 8 patients included in this study underwent surgery followed by radiosurgical treatment between January 2000 and January 2006. The patients included 5 males and 3 females aged 24-78 years (mean age: 53 years). The average maximum diameter of the tumor was 40 (35-45) mm. At the time of radiosurgery, the treatment size became 18 (9-20) mm. The mean peripheral dose administered was 11.8 (range 11-13) Gy, and the mean dose administered in the centre of the tumor was 23.75 (22-26) Gy. The mean follow-up period was 46 months after radiosurgery. Excellent facial nerve function (House-Brackmann grade 1 or 2) was preserved in 7/8 patients (87.5%). In the case of large vestibular schwannomas, the combined management is one option for maintaining cranial nerve function and tumor growth control.
Management of spinal metastasis is still controversial and must take into account various parameters. The aim of this study is to report the technical feasibility of a less invasive anterior cervical balloon kyphoplasty for vertebral body reinforcement. Six consecutive patients with an osteolytic cervical metastasis, without neurologic compromise, and for whom a curative treatment was not indicated, were retrospectively reviewed. All patients underwent balloon kyphoplasty through a small anterolateral cervicotomy. Evaluation of the technique outcomes was clinical and radiologic with a systematic CT-scan. During the follow-up period (6 months average), neurologic examination was normal in all cases with reduced cervical pain and without reported loss of motion of the cervical spine. A cement leakage was noticed in two cases without clinical consequences. This less invasive procedure was feasible and provided satisfactory preliminary results. It can therefore be a valuable alternative in selected cases where a curative treatment is not indicated.
ObjectElderly patients in poor general health frequently suffer vertebral body (VB) fractures due to osteoporosis or vertebral metastatic lesions. Kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty have become the standard treatment for these types of fractures. In certain conditions that cause local kyphosis, such as spinal cord compression due to a metastatic epidural tumor or the shortening of the spinal canal secondary to vertebral compression, the surgical treatment should provide decompression and stabilization during a short intervention. In this study the authors evaluated a surgical technique that frequently combines a same-session surgical decompression, such as a laminectomy, and posterior instrumentation-assisted stabilization during the same open intervention in which the VB is stabilized by kyphoplasty.MethodsDuring an 18-month period, the authors treated 18 patients with VB fractures according to this protocol: 14 patients with vertebral metastatic lesions and four with osteoporosis. The patients' mean age was 60 years. All suffered severe pain preoperatively (mean visual analog scale [VAS] score of 7). Fourteen of the 18 patients suffered a neurological deficit. Twenty-three vertebral levels were treated; in 15 patients it was necessary to place posterior instrumentation. The mean duration of the intervention was 90 minutes.Pain in all patients improved 3 days after the intervention, and the mean VAS score decreased to 2. Patients with a neurological dysfunction improved. The mean quantity of injected cement for the kyphoplasty procedure was 7 ml. The mean duration of hospitalization was 7 days. Neuroimaging revealed cement leaks in two cases: one into the disc interspace and one anteriorly into the fractured part of the vertebra. After the intervention, most patients with metastatic lesions underwent radiotherapy. No procedure-related complications occurred.ConclusionsThis procedure allows decompression of the spinal cord, consolidation of the VB and thus a stabilization of the vertebral column, and may provide an alternative treatment to invasive VB excision in patients in poor general health.
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